UFO Bargo NSW0:39

Bargo resident Darrin Cairns filmed what he believes is an UFO a number of years ago.

August 23rd 2017

7 months ago

The lyrics ‘aliens exist’ make so much more sense now.Source:Supplied

“THE universe is f**king gigantic and there’s life everywhere.”

This is the belief of former Blink 182 guitarist and singer Tom Delonge who walked away from the rock star life two years ago to further his research into UFOs and the great unknown.

While it might seem like a strange move to leave behind a successful music career, Delonge said he saw no other option after being vetted by the US government.

Speaking on The Joe Rogan Podcast, Delonge said it all started when he received a mysterious email asking him to meet government officials next to the Pentagon on a certain day and time.

“Somebody at a very high level closed the door, looked me in the eye and said, ‘OK, I am going to introduce you to somebody,’” Delonge said.

“That person comes to San Diego and puts me on the phone to a General.

“I was like, ‘I know what’s going on here and you guys are doing a kick-ass job and I would have done the same thing should I have been the guy at the top.’”

Delonge was referring to information he had uncovered regarding alien-life and technology, but was highly secretive when it came to giving explicit details of who he had held discussions with and what exactly he had witnessed.

Some of the details Delonge was able to share was the 1947 Roswell UFO incident was an experimental German aircraft, which the US was attempting to obscure the existence of.

“What I believe crashed at Roswell ... I believe it was German,” he said. “But it had hallmarks and technology based on alien technology. So, we put out a story saying, ‘It’s alien,’ and then we put out a story saying, ‘It’s a weather balloon’, but the real thing it was we didn’t want anyone to guess.”

He also claims the government eventually came across a “life form” during the Cold War.

“I fly out to this airport and I sit at a table in a restaurant at the airport,” he said. “No one’s in there, and this gentleman sits down. And the waiter comes up, he waves off the waiter, and he looks me in the eye and he says, ‘It was the Cold War and we found a life form.’”

US punk band Blink-182 is a thing of the past for Tom Delonge.Source:Supplied

While on the podcast, Delonge launched an appeal for funding for his new “public benefit corporation” named “To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science”.

Partnering with former government officials, Delonge hopes to crowdfund his own spacecraft and other “exotic technologies”.

“To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science has mobilised a team of the most experienced, connected and passionately curious minds from the US intelligence community, including the CIA and Department of Defense that have been operating under the shadows of top-secrecy for decades,” the website describes.

“[The company] strives to be a powerful vehicle for change by creating a consortium among science, aerospace and entertainment that will work collectively to allow gifted researchers the freedom to explore exotic science and technologies with the infrastructure and resources to rapidly transition them to products that can change the world.”

In regards to the science side of things, Delonge said his company will study consciousness, brain-computer interfaces, UAPs and telepathy.

For entertainment, the former Blink 182 front man said he will be publishing books and shooting documentaries and feature length films to educate the public on the discoveries made by the company.

The space craft Delonge hopes to crowdfund.Source:Supplied

For aerospace, To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science hopes to develop tech to launch small satellites into orbit using ground-based lasers, while also working on the spacecraft.

“[We have a] concept for an international point-to-point transportation craft that will erase the current travel limits of distance and time. It mimics the capabilities observed in unidentified aerial phenomenon by employing a drive system that alters space-time metric,” the website explains.

“We have glimpses of how the physics of this works, but we need to harvest technologies from the Science Division to ‘realise the capability’.”

Since launching, the company has raised over $2.3 million from over 1572 investors.

Do you think Tom Delonge is going to succeed? Continue the conversation in the comments below or with Matthew Dunn on Facebook and Twitter.